Does Competition from China Raise the Probability of Becoming Unemployed? An Analysis Using Spanish Workers’ Micro-Data

Abstract

In the period 1997–2011, import competition from China multiplied by five in the Spanish manufacturing sector. In this paper we analyze whether this severe increase in import competition from China is associated with a higher probability of becoming unemployed in the Spanish manufacturing sector. Linking industry-level data on imports with the working histories of 141,000 manufacturing workers, we show that import competition from China is positively associated with the probability of becoming unemployed. In particular, a standard deviation increase in import competition from China raises the probability of becoming unemployed between 0.8 and 3.5 % points, which represents between a 9 % and a 44 % increase relative to the unconditional probability of becoming unemployed. In contrast, we do not find any effect of import competition from China on manufacturing wages. Also, our estimations show that there is weak evidence of a positive association between a higher import competition from China and the probability of switching to an employment outside the manufacturing sector.

Donoso, V., Martín, V., & Minondo, A. (2014). Do differences in the exposure to Chinese imports lead to differences in local labour market ourcomes? An analysis for Spanish provinces.
Regional Studies, forthcoming.

Ebenstein, A., Harrison, A., McMillan, M., & Phillips, S. (2012). Estimating the impact of trade and offshoring on American workers using current population surveys.
Review of Economics and Statistics, forthcoming.